TY - JOUR
T1 - Self-Healing Hydrogel-Based Triboelectric Nanogenerator in Smart Glove System for Integrated Drone Safety Protection and Motion Control
AU - Wang, Chengwen
AU - Niu, Hongsen
AU - Shen, Guozhen
AU - Li, Yang
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2024 Wiley-VCH GmbH.
PY - 2025/4/25
Y1 - 2025/4/25
N2 - Flexible sensing technology offers significant advantages in gesture recognition and human–machine interactions. However, existent smart gloves based on flexible sensors still have limitations in their security mechanisms; thus, they are unsuitable for high-risk environments where identity verification and system protection are critical. This study proposes an innovative smart glove system in which person recognition and gesture control functionalities are integrated. The glove utilizes a triboelectric nanogenerator based on a polyvinyl-alcohol–sodium-alginate–conductive-polyaniline (PSP) hydrogel electrode as the sensor and exhibits high sensitivity, fast response/recovery, and fatigue resistance. These properties are primarily attributed to the excellent stretchability, conductivity, and self-healing ability of the PSP hydrogel. Because of the coordinated design of the hardware–software architecture, the smart glove enables precise control of drone flight postures via contact sensing. The glove also leverages non-contact sensing to recognize personalized fingertip trajectories, enabling user recognition and unlocking the aforementioned drone control interface. This design improves not only the flexibility and portability of drone operation but also safety of weapon systems in future battlefield environments.
AB - Flexible sensing technology offers significant advantages in gesture recognition and human–machine interactions. However, existent smart gloves based on flexible sensors still have limitations in their security mechanisms; thus, they are unsuitable for high-risk environments where identity verification and system protection are critical. This study proposes an innovative smart glove system in which person recognition and gesture control functionalities are integrated. The glove utilizes a triboelectric nanogenerator based on a polyvinyl-alcohol–sodium-alginate–conductive-polyaniline (PSP) hydrogel electrode as the sensor and exhibits high sensitivity, fast response/recovery, and fatigue resistance. These properties are primarily attributed to the excellent stretchability, conductivity, and self-healing ability of the PSP hydrogel. Because of the coordinated design of the hardware–software architecture, the smart glove enables precise control of drone flight postures via contact sensing. The glove also leverages non-contact sensing to recognize personalized fingertip trajectories, enabling user recognition and unlocking the aforementioned drone control interface. This design improves not only the flexibility and portability of drone operation but also safety of weapon systems in future battlefield environments.
KW - gesture control
KW - person recognition
KW - self-healing hydrogel
KW - smart glove
KW - triboelectric nanogenerator
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=105003747542&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1002/adfm.202419809
DO - 10.1002/adfm.202419809
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:105003747542
SN - 1616-301X
VL - 35
JO - Advanced Functional Materials
JF - Advanced Functional Materials
IS - 17
M1 - 2419809
ER -